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OIE Activities and Vision for the21st Century
28th Conference of the OIE RegionalCommission for Asia, the Far East and Oceania
Cebu, Philippines
Dr Bernard VallatOIE Director General
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1. Background on the OIE2. OIE Current Policies3. Current Global Context4. Use of Global Public Good concept5. Future Challenges6. OIE Support to Good Governance 7. Other Global Programmes8. Conclusion
Contents
Contents1. Background on the OIE2. OIE Current Policies3. Current Global Context4. Use of Global Public Good concept5. Future Challenges6. OIE Support to Good Governance 7. Other Global Programmes8. Conclusion
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The World Organisation for Animal Health
OIE Headquarters in Paris (France)
5 Regional Representations
7 Sub-Regional Representations
An intergovernmental organisation founded in 1924 preceding the United Nations
Creation of the Office International des Epizooties (OIE)
World Organisation for Animal Health (OIE)
Creation of the United Nations
1924 20031945
in 2013:
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178 Member Countries in 2013
Africa 52 – Americas 30 – Asia, the Far East and Oceania 36 Europe 53 – Middle-East 20
Some countries belong to more than one region
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Statutory contributions
6 categories of statutory contributions
6 categories of statutory contributions
Member Countries on the United Nations’ list of “Least Developed
Countries” benefit from a 50% reduction of
their statutory contribution
Member Countries on the United Nations’ list of “Least Developed
Countries” benefit from a 50% reduction of
their statutory contribution
Part of the Members’ statutory contributions is
compulsorily used to finance the
Organisation’s Regional Representations
operations
Part of the Members’ statutory contributions is
compulsorily used to finance the
Organisation’s Regional Representations
operations
Voluntary contributions
World Animal Health
and Welfare Fund
World Animal Health
and Welfare Fund
Funding by countries hosting
OIE offices in support of their
activities
Funding by countries hosting
OIE offices in support of their
activities
Specific donationse.g. grants to buy
buildings
Specific donationse.g. grants to buy
buildings
Provision of staff (Headquarters, regional offices)
Provision of staff (Headquarters, regional offices)
Various sources
Publications, fees related to official
recognition of some diseases, etc…
Publications, fees related to official
recognition of some diseases, etc…
Financing of the OIE
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Contents1. Background on the OIE2. OIE Current Policies3. Current Global Context4. Use of Global Public Good concept5. Future Challenges6. OIE Support to Good Governance 7. Other Global Programmes8. Conclusion
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OIE Current Policies:Key concepts
To improve animal health worldwide ensuring Food Security and Food Safety
‘Public Good’ concept; ‘One Health’ concept; Good Veterinary Governance; Global, regional and national animal health strategies and
diseases control and eradication programmes.
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OIE Current Policies :Key concepts (2)
Standard Setting
OIE is the WTO reference organisation for science-based standards in international trade, disease surveillance and control methods, and quality of Veterinary Services;
Animal welfare: OIE leadership since 2002; Animal production food safety (liaison with Codex
Alimentarius Commission).
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OIE Current Policies :Key concepts (3)
Quality of veterinarians
Veterinarians play an essential role in society; Good governance of public and private component of
Veterinary Services and Aquatic Animal Health Services; Standards for quality of veterinary education; Capacity building; Role of Veterinary Statutory Body; Public-private partnerships (private veterinarians, farmers,
researchers, others).
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Contents1. Background on the OIE2. OIE Current Policies3. Current Global Context4. Use of Global Public Good concept5. Future Challenges6. OIE Support to Good Governance 7. Other Global Programmes8. Conclusion
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Global demand for food security
Population growth: +1 billion people by 2050;
Shift from poverty to middle-class;
Increase in the number of daily meals and the protein intake of individuals;
Many projections indicate that the demand for animal protein will increase by more than 50% in a near future;
Focus on developing and transition countries.
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World production
0
50
100
150
200
250
300
1960 1965 1970 1975 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000 2005 2010
East Asia
Europe
NorthAmerica
Other
Central &South America
Million tonnes
Source: FAOSTAT
0
100
200
300
400
500
600
700
1960 1965 1970 1975 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000 2005 2010
East Asia
W. Europe
N. America
Central &S. America
Other
South Asia
E. Europe
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
1960 1965 1970 1975 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000 2005 2010
East Asia
Europe
N. America
Central &S. America
Other
Million tonnes
Million tonnes
Meat Milk
Eggs
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Drivers of consumption and future trends
World demand for livestock food products since 1990:Milk +30% Meat +60% Eggs + 80%
+70% by 2050
• Population growth : +30% since 1990+30% or 9 billion people by 2050
• Income growth : +1.5%/year since 1980, +5 to 7%/ year in Asia +2%/year by 2050
• Urbanization: 20% in 1900, 40% in 1990, >50% in 201070% of urban people in 2050
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• Unprecedented movements of commodities and people, used by pathogens to colonize all the planet;
• Nowadays, pathogens are transported around the world faster than the average incubation time of most animal diseases;
• Climate changes and human behaviour allow colonisation of new territories by vectors and pathogens (e.g. bluetongue in Europe, RVF).
Globalisation
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Repeated Crises
Disease Emergence
Globalisation
Animal diseases: a major problem for animal productions and human health
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The importance of the zoonotic potential of animal pathogens
• 60% of human pathogens are zoonotic;
• 75% of emerging diseases are zoonotic;
• 80% of agents with potential bioterrorist use are zoonotic pathogens;
• Veterinarians are on the front line to protect human health.
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Disease control benefits
• Impact of animal diseases on animal production/losses of animal products (~20% worldwide);
• Food shortages are also a public health problem, just like food safety;
• Protection of goods (productive livestock = capital);
• Market access: local, regional and international;
• Poverty alleviation (1 billion poor livestock producers).
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Contents1. Background on the OIE2. OIE Current Policies3. Current Global Context4. Use of Global Public Good concept5. Future Challenges6. OIE Support to Good Governance 7. Other Global Programmes8. Conclusion
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The ‘Global Public Good’ Concept
The control and eradication of infectious diseases benefits all countries and all generations;
Countries depend on each other – the failure of one endangers all;
Animal health systems are not a strictly commercial or agricultural good. They are fully eligible for national and global public resources.
Supporting Veterinary Services and animal health programmes:
a national and global priority20
Requirements for all countries: Need for legislation, and its efficient implementation through appropriate human and financial resources allowing national animal health systems providing for:
• Appropriate surveillance, early detection of natural and intentional events, diagnostic capacity, transparency, notification;
• Building and maintaining efficient epidemio-surveillancenetworks and territorial coverage of the entire national territory, coordinated by an efficient national chain of command.
Responsibility of all Governments
Good Governance of Veterinary Services
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• Early detection;
• Rapid response to animal disease outbreaks;
• Alliances between public and private sectors (veterinarians, VSBs, farmers);
• Biosecurity measures;
• Vaccination when appropriate;
• Compensation mechanisms;
• National chain of command;
• Education and research.
Key elements for efficient Veterinary Services
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Ministerial Declaration - Meeting of G20 Agriculture Ministers - June 2011
Action Plan on Food Price Volatility and Agriculture
(25.) As far as public health, animal health and plant health are concerned, we stress the importance of strengthening international and regional networks, international standard settings taking into account national and regional differences, information, surveillance and traceability systems, good governance and official services, since they ensure an early detection and a rapid response to biological threats, facilitate trade flows and contribute to global food security. (…)
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G20 Ministerial Declaration (2011)
(…) We encourage international organizations, especially FAO, the World Health Organization (WHO), the World
Organization for Animal Health (OIE), the Codex AlimentariusCommission (Codex), the International Plant Protection Convention (IPPC) and WTO to continue their efforts
towards enhancing interagency cooperation. (…)
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A stronger collaboration between
WHO, FAO and OIE
Sharing responsibilities and coordinating global activities to address health risks at the animal-human-ecosystemsinterfaces
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High Level Technical Meeting (HLTM) to Address Health Risks at the Human-Animal-Ecosystems Interfaces - November 2011, Mexico City (Mexico)Main outcomes:• Strong governance structures and aligned legal frameworks, building on
existing mechanisms, are essential to achieving effective disease surveillance and response;
• Using intersectoral approaches to risk assessment and risk mitigation for health issues at the human-animal-ecosystems interfaces is important;
• Sharing information and strengthening collaboration among different sectors, including their public and private components, in disease surveillance and reporting, is crucial to ensuring early detection and rapid response to health threats;
• Rabies, zoonotic influenza and antimicrobial resistance are selected as priority topics for intersectorial approach.
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Stronger Veterinary Services and control of diseases at source is the most effective way:
To protect animal and human health;
to improve animal production everywhere;
to protect production systems in disease free countries from the introduction of highly contagious diseases.
Conclusions of H5N1 Crisis
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Global RP Eradication Program: lessons learned
Early 1980s
Early 1990s
2001
2004
NEED FOR: A long term vision Commitment of governments Support of the international community and generous donors Support of global and regional organizations Dedicated international platforms for coordination (FAO, OIE) Efficient tools for control and eradication. Relevant model for FMD and PPR.
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Contents1. Background on the OIE2. OIE Current Policies3. Current Global Context4. Use of Global Public Good concept5. Future Challenges6. OIE Support to Good Governance 7. Other Global Programmes8. Conclusion
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What does the future hold? Emergence and re-emergence of new diseases, in the
context of climate change and changing ecosystems;
New risks arising at the wildlife – human – animal interface;
Globalisation trade and tourism bringing new risks;
Constant threat of bioterrorism;
Societal demand for more proteins, but also human health risk alleviation, animal welfare and environment preservation.
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• The role and responsibilities of the OIE and of National Veterinary Services correspond to a Global Public Good whose benefits extend to all countries, people and generations, that operate across the global food supply chain;
• Sanitary crises, causing considerable economic losses and social burden, may be prevented at a reasonable cost by appropriate implementation of OIE standards on veterinary good governance by all those concerned.
The OIE vision
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• Effective implementation however, cannot take place without:− The political will and support of both rich and poor
countries;
− Providing or advocating effective financial and technical support to those who are not yet in a position to apply such international standards due to a lack of financial and human resources is a “win-win” investment;
− Promoting appropriate alliances between private and public sectors at global, regional and national levels;
− Promoting cross-cooperation between global organisations and relevant regional organisations.
The OIE vision
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Contents1. Background on the OIE2. OIE Current Policies3. Current Global Context4. Use of Global Public Good concept5. Future Challenges6. OIE Support to Good Governance 7. Other Global Programmes8. Conclusion
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Strengthening Veterinary ServicesCapacity building
Independent evaluations (PVS Evaluations);
Regular seminars for newly assigned OIE Delegates;
Establishment of topic-specific national Focal Points in each OIE Member country – on-going seminars;
Network of OIE Reference Laboratories and Collaborating Centres;
Laboratory, VSB ,and education twinning initiatives => enhance technical capacity in the regions;
OIE Scientific and normative publications.
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Capacity building for VS
http://www.oie.int/en/support-to-oie-members/pvs-pathway/
« Diagnosis » « Prescription »
« Treatment »
The OIE collaborates with governments, donors and other stakeholders
includingVeterinary Services’ Strategic Priorities
Capacity Building, Specific Activities,
Projects and Programs
PVSGap Analysis
PVS Evaluation
PVS PathwayFollow-Up Missions
Veterinary Legislation
Public / PrivatePartnerships
VeterinaryEducation
Laboratories
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OIE Members
OIE PVSEvaluation
PVS Gap Analysis Legislation
PVS Evaluation Follow-up
Requests Missions done Requests Missions
done Requests Missions done Requests Missions
done
Africa 52 53 50 43 36 27 17 12 9
Americas 29 25 22 15 11 7 4 5 2
Asia & Pacific 32 19 18 15 11 5 5 3 2Europe 53 16 16 8 6 3 2 1 1
Middle East 12 12 11 8 4 4 4 1 0
TOTAL 178 125 117 89 68 46 32 22 14
OIE PVS Pathway – State of play
5 November 201336
OIE PVS Evaluation of Aquatic AHSState of play (5 November 2013)
OIE Members
Requests received
Missions implemente
dAfrica 52 3 2
Americas 29 2 1
Asia, the Far East and Oceania
32 3 3
Europe 53 0 0
Middle East 12 0 0
TOTAL 178 8 6
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Contents1. Background on the OIE2. OIE Current Policies3. Current Global Context4. Use of Global Public Good concept5. Future Challenges6. OIE Support to Good Governance 7. Other Global Programmes8. Conclusion
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Support FMD global control on the basis of theimplementation of the recommendations of the last FAO/OIEGlobal Conference on FMD Control
• Towards Global Controland Eradication of FMD
Important OIE Initiatives
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OIENew articles in
the Code
Tools
The Progressive Control Pathway for
Foot and Mouth Disease (PCP-FMD)
LaboratoriesVaccines
WAHISWAHID
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Standards and recommendations aiming at a global control of other diseases such as rabies and PPR;
Recommendation of the 5th Global GF TADs Steering Committee
Paris Oct 2012
N° 15. Taking into account the experience gained with the Global GF-TADs Working Group on FMD, the prerogatives and activities of theFMD WG be extended to PPR (same framework and procedures)
First meeting of the GF TADs WGon the 21st- 22nd January 2013
OIE headquarters, Paris
Other Global Programmes (cont.)
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The PPR Strategy will include several components such as:1- Improving global PPR control;
2- Strengthening Veterinary Services;
3- Improving the prevention and control of other major diseases of livestock.
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DONORS AND PARTNERS
New ZealandMinistry of Agriculture
and Forestry
Australian GovernmentDepartment of Agriculture,
Fisheries and Forestry
Canadian International Development Agency
Foreign Affairs and International Trade
Canadian Food Inspection Agency
Ministero della Salute43
Other Global Programmes (cont.)
New twinning projects for veterinary education establishments (VEE) and Veterinary Statutory Bodies (VSB);
Implementation of the recommendations of previous Global Conferences; Rabies (Seoul September 2011), and Animal Welfare (Kuala Lumpur, November 2012);
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Other Global Programmes (cont.)
Key issues on international horse movement
New Increasing number of equestrian events, particularly for FEI horses;
Well established circuit for race horses;
Leads to ever increasing number of international travel of horses, mainly by air.
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Other Global Programmes (cont.)
Key issues on international horse movement
Regions / countries have not (yet) adopted principle of temporary importation and often request excessive sanitary measures, exceeding Code requirements;
The recognition by Veterinary Services of a “sub-population” of high health, high performance horses (HHP) is proposed by OIE;
Concept is based on existing OIE standards (e.g. compartment/zone; identification & traceability; health certification).
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Preparation of the 6th OIE Strategic Plan
Draft proposed by the Council with support from a consultant;
Consultation of Regional and Specialist Commissions;
Final adoption in May 2015 by the World Assembly.
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Contents1. Background on the OIE2. OIE Current Policies3. Current Global Context4. Use of Global Public Good concept5. Future Challenges6. OIE Support to Good Governance 7. Other Global Programmes8. Conclusion
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• Setting internationally recognised standards and guidelines in animal health, veterinary Public Health and animal welfare;
• Disseminating scientific and animal health information, particularly in diseases control methods;
• Recognising officially relevant disease free status of countries/zones;
• Providing technical and political support for good governance and Veterinary Services to all Member Countries using PVS Pathway and other capacity building activities;
• Focusing on solidarity and mobilising potential donors for developing countries.
The OIE will continue to support Members by:
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• Developing transparency on animal disease situation worldwide;
• Providing permanent support to Laboratory, VSB and Veterinary Education mechanisms;
• Supporting the improvement of the quality and organisationof the Veterinary profession;
• Influencing governments for better recognition of the key role of veterinarians in society.
The OIE will continue to support Members by:
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